- The parser of `git grep`'s output uses `bufio.Scanner`, which is a good
choice overall, however it does have a limit that's usually not noticed,
it will not read more than `64 * 1024` bytes at once which can be hit in
practical scenarios.
- Use `bufio.Reader` instead which doesn't have this limitation, but is
a bit harder to work with as it's a more lower level primitive.
- Adds unit test.
- Resolves https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/issues/3149
- `%w` is to wrap errors, but can only be used by `fmt.Errorf`. Instead
use `%v` to display the error.
- Regression of #2763
Before:
[E] failed to run attr-check. Error: %!w(*exec.ExitError=&{0xc006568e28 []})
Stderr: fatal: this operation must be run in a work tree
After:
[E] failed to run attr-check. Error: exit status 128
Stderr: fatal: this operation must be run in a work tree
`CommitGPGSignature` was originally made to store information about a
commit's GPG signature. Nowadays, it is used to store information about
SSH signatures too, and not just commit signatures, but tag signatures
too.
As such, rename it to `ObjectSignature`, because that describes what it
does a whole lot better.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
Just like commits, tags can be signed with either an OpenPGP, or with an
SSH key. While the latter is supported already, SSH-signed tags have not
been. This patch teaches the git module to recognize and handle
SSH-signed tags too.
This will stop the signatures appearing in release notes, but are
currently unused otherwise.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
Most time, when invoking `git.OpenRepository`, `objectFormat` will not
be used, so it's a waste to invoke commandline to get the object format.
This PR make it a lazy operation, only invoke that when necessary.
(cherry picked from commit e84e5db6de0306d514b1f1a9657931fb7197a188)
(cherry picked from commit 25b842df261452a29570ba89ffc3a4842d73f68c)
Conflicts:
routers/web/repo/wiki.go
services/repository/branch.go
services/repository/migrate.go
services/wiki/wiki.go
also apply to Forgejo specific usage of the refactored functions
Close #29509
Windows, unlike Linux, does not have signal-specified exit codes.
Therefore, we should add a Windows-specific check for Windows. If we
don't do this, the logs will always show a failed status, even though
the command actually works correctly.
If you check the Go source code in exec_windows.go, you will see that it
always returns exit code 1.
![image](https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/assets/30816317/9dfd7c70-9995-47d9-9641-db793f58770c)
The exit code 1 does not exclusively signify a SIGNAL KILL; it can
indicate any issue that occurs when a program fails.
(cherry picked from commit 423372d84ab3d885e47d4a00cd69d6040b61cc4c)
- When a user goes opens a symlink file in Forgejo, the file would be
rendered with the path of the symlink as content.
- Add a button that is shown when the user opens a *valid* symlink file,
which means that the symlink must have an valid path to an existent
file and after 999 follows isn't a symlink anymore.
- Return the relative path from the `FollowLink` functions, because Git
really doesn't want to tell where an file is located based on the blob ID.
- Adds integration tests.
Fixes #29101
Related #29298
Discard all read data to prevent misinterpreting existing data. Some
discard calls were missing in error cases.
---------
Co-authored-by: yp05327 <576951401@qq.com>
(cherry picked from commit d6811baf88ca6d58b92d4dc12b1f2a292198751f)
Fixes the reason why #29101 is hard to replicate.
Related #29297
Create a repo with a file with minimum size 4097 bytes (I use 10000) and
execute the following code:
```go
gitRepo, err := gitrepo.OpenRepository(db.DefaultContext, <repo>)
assert.NoError(t, err)
commit, err := gitRepo.GetCommit(<sha>)
assert.NoError(t, err)
entry, err := commit.GetTreeEntryByPath(<file>)
assert.NoError(t, err)
b := entry.Blob()
// Create a reader
r, err := b.DataAsync()
assert.NoError(t, err)
defer r.Close()
// Create a second reader
r2, err := b.DataAsync()
assert.NoError(t, err) // Should be no error but is ErrNotExist
defer r2.Close()
```
The problem is the check in `CatFileBatch`:
79217ea63c/modules/git/repo_base_nogogit.go (L81-L87)
`Buffered() > 0` is used to check if there is a "operation" in progress
at the moment. This is a problem because we can't control the internal
buffer in the `bufio.Reader`. The code above demonstrates a sequence
which initiates an operation for which the code thinks there is no
active processing. The second call to `DataAsync()` therefore reuses the
existing instances instead of creating a new batch reader.
(cherry picked from commit f74c869221624092999097af38b6f7fae4701420)
If a documentation file is marked with a `linguist-documentation=false`
attribute, include it in language stats.
However, make sure that we do *not* include documentation languages as
fallback.
Added a new test case to exercise the formerly buggy behaviour.
Problem discovered while reviewing @KN4CK3R's tests from gitea#29267.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
Based on @KN4CK3R's work in gitea#29267. This drops the custom
`LinguistBoolAttrib` type, and uses `optional.Option` instead. I added
the `isTrue()` and `isFalse()` (function-local) helpers to make the code
easier to follow, because these names convey their goal better than
`v.ValueorDefault(false)` or `!v.ValueOrDefault(true)`.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
The test suite was broken e.g. on Debian 12 due to requiring a very
recent version of Git installed on the system. This commit skips SHA256
tests in the git module, if a Git version older than 2.42 or gogit is used.
With this option, it is possible to require a linear commit history with
the following benefits over the next best option `Rebase+fast-forward`:
The original commits continue existing, with the original signatures
continuing to stay valid instead of being rewritten, there is no merge
commit, and reverting commits becomes easier.
Closes #24906
- In Git version v2.43.1, the behavior of `GIT_FLUSH` was accidentially
flipped. This causes Forgejo to hang on the `check-attr` command,
because no output was being flushed.
- Workaround this by detecting if Git v2.43.1 is used and set
`GIT_FLUSH=0` thus getting the correct behavior.
- Ref: https://lore.kernel.org/git/CABn0oJvg3M_kBW-u=j3QhKnO=6QOzk-YFTgonYw_UvFS1NTX4g@mail.gmail.com/
- Resolves #2333.
Replace #28849. Thanks to @yp05327 for the looking into the problem.
Fix #28840
The old behavior of newSignatureFromCommitline is not right. The new
parseSignatureFromCommitLine:
1. never fails
2. only accept one format (if there is any other, it could be easily added)
And add some tests.
(cherry picked from commit a24e1da7e9e38fc5f5c84c083d122c0cc3da4b74)
Recognise the `linguist-documentation` and `linguist-detectable`
attributes in `.gitattributes` files, and use them in
`GetLanguageStats()` to make a decision whether to include a particular
file in the stats or not.
This allows one more control over which files in their repositories
contribute toward the language statistics, so that for a project that is
mostly documentation, the language stats can reflect that.
Fixes #1672.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
(cherry picked from commit 6d4e02fe5f)
(cherry picked from commit ee1ead8189)
(cherry picked from commit 2dbec730e8)
When trying to find a `README.md` in a `.profile` repo, do so case
insensitively. This change does not make it possible to render readmes
in formats other than Markdown, it just removes the hard-coded
"README.md".
Also adds a few tests to make sure the change works.
Fixes #1494.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
(cherry picked from commit edd219d8e9)
(cherry picked from commit 2c0105ef17)
(cherry picked from commit 3975a9f3aa)
(cherry picked from commit dee4a18423)
(cherry picked from commit 60aee6370f)
## Purpose
This is a refactor toward building an abstraction over managing git
repositories.
Afterwards, it does not matter anymore if they are stored on the local
disk or somewhere remote.
## What this PR changes
We used `git.OpenRepository` everywhere previously.
Now, we should split them into two distinct functions:
Firstly, there are temporary repositories which do not change:
```go
git.OpenRepository(ctx, diskPath)
```
Gitea managed repositories having a record in the database in the
`repository` table are moved into the new package `gitrepo`:
```go
gitrepo.OpenRepository(ctx, repo_model.Repo)
```
Why is `repo_model.Repository` the second parameter instead of file
path?
Because then we can easily adapt our repository storage strategy.
The repositories can be stored locally, however, they could just as well
be stored on a remote server.
## Further changes in other PRs
- A Git Command wrapper on package `gitrepo` could be created. i.e.
`NewCommand(ctx, repo_model.Repository, commands...)`. `git.RunOpts{Dir:
repo.RepoPath()}`, the directory should be empty before invoking this
method and it can be filled in the function only. #28940
- Remove the `RepoPath()`/`WikiPath()` functions to reduce the
possibility of mistakes.
---------
Co-authored-by: delvh <dev.lh@web.de>
This should fix https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/issues/28927
Technically older versions of Git would support this flag as well, but
per https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/pull/28466 that's the version
where using it (object-format=sha256) left "experimental" state.
`sha1` is (currently) the default, so older clients should be unaffected
in either case.
Signed-off-by: jolheiser <john.olheiser@gmail.com>
When LFS hooks are present in gitea-repositories, operations like git
push for creating a pull request fail. These repositories are not meant
to include LFS files or git push them, that is handled separately. And
so they should not have LFS hooks.
Installing git-lfs on some systems (like Debian Linux) will
automatically set up /etc/gitconfig to create LFS hooks in repositories.
For most git commands in Gitea this is not a problem, either because
they run on a temporary clone or the git command does not create LFS
hooks.
But one case where this happens is git archive for creating repository
archives. To fix that, add a GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM=1 to disable using the
system configuration for that command.
According to a comment, GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM is not used for all git
commands because the system configuration can be intentionally set up
for Gitea to use.
Resolves #19810, #21148
Nowadays, cache will be used on almost everywhere of Gitea and it cannot
be disabled, otherwise some features will become unaviable.
Then I think we can just remove the option for cache enable. That means
cache cannot be disabled.
But of course, we can still use cache configuration to set how should
Gitea use the cache.
The 4 functions are duplicated, especially as interface methods. I think
we just need to keep `MustID` the only one and remove other 3.
```
MustID(b []byte) ObjectID
MustIDFromString(s string) ObjectID
NewID(b []byte) (ObjectID, error)
NewIDFromString(s string) (ObjectID, error)
```
Introduced the new interfrace method `ComputeHash` which will replace
the interface `HasherInterface`. Now we don't need to keep two
interfaces.
Reintroduced `git.NewIDFromString` and `git.MustIDFromString`. The new
function will detect the hash length to decide which objectformat of it.
If it's 40, then it's SHA1. If it's 64, then it's SHA256. This will be
right if the commitID is a full one. So the parameter should be always a
full commit id.
@AdamMajer Please review.
Update golang.org/x/crypto for CVE-2023-48795 and update other packages.
`go-git` is not updated because it needs time to figure out why some
tests fail.
- Remove `ObjectFormatID`
- Remove function `ObjectFormatFromID`.
- Use `Sha1ObjectFormat` directly but not a pointer because it's an
empty struct.
- Store `ObjectFormatName` in `repository` struct
Refactor Hash interfaces and centralize hash function. This will allow
easier introduction of different hash function later on.
This forms the "no-op" part of the SHA256 enablement patch.
The summary string ends up in the database, and (at least) MySQL &
PostgreSQL require valid UTF8 strings.
Fixes #28178
Co-authored-by: Darrin Smart <darrin@filmlight.ltd.uk>
assert.Fail() will continue to execute the code while assert.FailNow()
not. I thought those uses of assert.Fail() should exit immediately.
PS: perhaps it's a good idea to use
[require](https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/stretchr/testify/require)
somewhere because the assert package's default behavior does not exit
when an error occurs, which makes it difficult to find the root error
reason.
This pull request is a minor code cleanup.
From the Go specification (https://go.dev/ref/spec#For_range):
> "1. For a nil slice, the number of iterations is 0."
> "3. If the map is nil, the number of iterations is 0."
`len` returns 0 if the slice or map is nil
(https://pkg.go.dev/builtin#len). Therefore, checking `len(v) > 0`
before a loop is unnecessary.
---
At the time of writing this pull request, there wasn't a lint rule that
catches these issues. The closest I could find is
https://staticcheck.dev/docs/checks/#S103
Signed-off-by: Eng Zer Jun <engzerjun@gmail.com>
Closes #26329
This PR adds the ability to ignore revisions specified in the
`.git-blame-ignore-revs` file in the root of the repository.
![grafik](https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/assets/1666336/9e91be0c-6e9c-431c-bbe9-5f80154251c8)
The banner is displayed in this case. I intentionally did not add a UI
way to bypass the ignore file (same behaviour as Github) but you can add
`?bypass-blame-ignore=true` to the url manually.
---------
Co-authored-by: wxiaoguang <wxiaoguang@gmail.com>
From the Go specification:
> "1. For a nil slice, the number of iterations is 0."
https://go.dev/ref/spec#For_range
Therefore, an additional nil check for before the loop is unnecessary.
Signed-off-by: Eng Zer Jun <engzerjun@gmail.com>
Hi,
We'd like to add merge files files to GetCommitFileStatus fucntions so
API returns the list of all the files associated to a merged pull
request commit, like GitHub API does.
The list of affectedFiles for an API commit is fetched from toCommit()
function in routers/api/v1/repo/commits.go, and API was returning no
file in case of a pull request with no conflict, or just files
associated to the confict resolution, but NOT the full list of merged
files.
This would lead to situations where a CI polling a repo for changes
could miss some file changes due to API returning an empty / partial
list in case of such merged pull requests. (Hope this makes sense :) )
NOTE: I'd like to add a unittest in
integrations/api_repo_git_commits_test.go but failed to understand how
to add my own test bare repo so I can make a test on a merged pull
request commit to check for affectedFiles.
Is there a merged pull request in there that I could use maybe?
Could someone please direct me to the relevant ressources with
informations on how to do that please?
Thanks for your time,
Laurent.
---------
Co-authored-by: Thomas Desveaux <desveaux.thomas@gmail.com>
Close stdout correctly for "git blame", otherwise the failed "git blame"
would case the request hanging forever.
And "os.Stderr" should never (seldom) be used as git command's stderr
Fix #26064
Some git commands should use parent context, otherwise it would exit too
early (by the default timeout, 10m), and the "cmd.Wait" waits till the
pipes are closed.
Fixes #26270.
Co-Author: @wxiaoguang
Thanks @lunny for providing this solution
As
https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/issues/26270#issuecomment-1661695151
said, at present we cannot get the names of changed files correctly when
the `OldCommitID` is `EmptySHA`. In this PR, the `GetCommitFilesChanged`
method is added and will be used to get the changed files by commit ID.
References:
- https://stackoverflow.com/a/424142
---------
Co-authored-by: wxiaoguang <wxiaoguang@gmail.com>
The `FileBlame` function looks strange, it has `revision` as argument
but doesn't use it.
Since the function never be used, I think we could just remove it.
If anyone thinks it should be kept, please help fix `revision`.
Co-authored-by: Giteabot <teabot@gitea.io>
To record which command is slow, this PR adds a debug log for slow git
operations.
---------
Co-authored-by: Lauris BH <lauris@nix.lv>
Co-authored-by: delvh <dev.lh@web.de>
This PR replaces all string refName as a type `git.RefName` to make the
code more maintainable.
Fix #15367
Replaces #23070
It also fixed a bug that tags are not sync because `git remote --prune
origin` will not remove local tags if remote removed.
We in fact should use `git fetch --prune --tags origin` but not `git
remote update origin` to do the sync.
Some answer from ChatGPT as ref.
> If the git fetch --prune --tags command is not working as expected,
there could be a few reasons why. Here are a few things to check:
>
>Make sure that you have the latest version of Git installed on your
system. You can check the version by running git --version in your
terminal. If you have an outdated version, try updating Git and see if
that resolves the issue.
>
>Check that your Git repository is properly configured to track the
remote repository's tags. You can check this by running git config
--get-all remote.origin.fetch and verifying that it includes
+refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*. If it does not, you can add it by running git
config --add remote.origin.fetch "+refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*".
>
>Verify that the tags you are trying to prune actually exist on the
remote repository. You can do this by running git ls-remote --tags
origin to list all the tags on the remote repository.
>
>Check if any local tags have been created that match the names of tags
on the remote repository. If so, these local tags may be preventing the
git fetch --prune --tags command from working properly. You can delete
local tags using the git tag -d command.
---------
Co-authored-by: delvh <dev.lh@web.de>
Fix #24896
If users set different languages by `linguist-language`, the `stats` map
could be: `java: 100, Java: 200`.
Language stats are stored as case-insensitive in database and there is a
unique key.
So, the different language names should be merged to one unique name:
`Java: 300`
Close #13454 , Close #23255, Close #14697 (and maybe more related
issues)
Many users have the requirement to customize the git config. This PR
introduces an easy way: put the options in Gitea's app.ini
`[git.config]`, then the config options will be applied to git config.
And it can support more flexible default config values, eg: now
`diff.algorithm=histogram` by default. According to:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/32367597/4754037 , `histogram diff` is
efficient and doesn't like to cause server-side problems.
---------
Co-authored-by: silverwind <me@silverwind.io>
Co-authored-by: KN4CK3R <admin@oldschoolhack.me>
Co-authored-by: Giteabot <teabot@gitea.io>
## ⚠️ Breaking
The `log.<mode>.<logger>` style config has been dropped. If you used it,
please check the new config manual & app.example.ini to make your
instance output logs as expected.
Although many legacy options still work, it's encouraged to upgrade to
the new options.
The SMTP logger is deleted because SMTP is not suitable to collect logs.
If you have manually configured Gitea log options, please confirm the
logger system works as expected after upgrading.
## Description
Close #12082 and maybe more log-related issues, resolve some related
FIXMEs in old code (which seems unfixable before)
Just like rewriting queue #24505 : make code maintainable, clear legacy
bugs, and add the ability to support more writers (eg: JSON, structured
log)
There is a new document (with examples): `logging-config.en-us.md`
This PR is safer than the queue rewriting, because it's just for
logging, it won't break other logic.
## The old problems
The logging system is quite old and difficult to maintain:
* Unclear concepts: Logger, NamedLogger, MultiChannelledLogger,
SubLogger, EventLogger, WriterLogger etc
* Some code is diffuclt to konw whether it is right:
`log.DelNamedLogger("console")` vs `log.DelNamedLogger(log.DEFAULT)` vs
`log.DelLogger("console")`
* The old system heavily depends on ini config system, it's difficult to
create new logger for different purpose, and it's very fragile.
* The "color" trick is difficult to use and read, many colors are
unnecessary, and in the future structured log could help
* It's difficult to add other log formats, eg: JSON format
* The log outputer doesn't have full control of its goroutine, it's
difficult to make outputer have advanced behaviors
* The logs could be lost in some cases: eg: no Fatal error when using
CLI.
* Config options are passed by JSON, which is quite fragile.
* INI package makes the KEY in `[log]` section visible in `[log.sub1]`
and `[log.sub1.subA]`, this behavior is quite fragile and would cause
more unclear problems, and there is no strong requirement to support
`log.<mode>.<logger>` syntax.
## The new design
See `logger.go` for documents.
## Screenshot
<details>
![image](https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/assets/2114189/4462d713-ba39-41f5-bb08-de912e67e1ff)
![image](https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/assets/2114189/b188035e-f691-428b-8b2d-ff7b2199b2f9)
![image](https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/assets/2114189/132e9745-1c3b-4e00-9e0d-15eaea495dee)
</details>
## TODO
* [x] add some new tests
* [x] fix some tests
* [x] test some sub-commands (manually ....)
---------
Co-authored-by: Jason Song <i@wolfogre.com>
Co-authored-by: delvh <dev.lh@web.de>
Co-authored-by: Giteabot <teabot@gitea.io>
Due to #24409 , we can now specify '--not' when getting all commits from
a repo to exclude commits from a different branch.
When I wrote that PR, I forgot to also update the code that counts the
number of commits in the repo. So now, if the --not option is used, it
may return too many commits, which can indicate that another page of
data is available when it is not.
This PR passes --not to the commands that count the number of commits in
a repo
For my specific use case, I'd like to get all commits that are on one
branch but NOT on the other branch.
For instance, I'd like to get all the commits on `Branch1` that are not
also on `master` (I.e. all commits that were made after `Branch1` was
created).
This PR adds a `not` query param that gets passed down to the `git log`
command to allow the user to exclude items from `GetAllCommits`.
See [git
documentation](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-log#Documentation/git-log.txt---not)
---------
Co-authored-by: Giteabot <teabot@gitea.io>
Close #7570
1. Clearly define the wiki path behaviors, see
`services/wiki/wiki_path.go` and tests
2. Keep compatibility with old contents
3. Allow to use dashes in titles, eg: "2000-01-02 Meeting record"
4. Add a "Pages" link in the dropdown, otherwise users can't go to the
Pages page easily.
5. Add a "View original git file" link in the Pages list, even if some
file names are broken, users still have a chance to edit or remove it,
without cloning the wiki repo to local.
6. Fix 500 error when the name contains prefix spaces.
This PR also introduces the ability to support sub-directories, but it
can't be done at the moment due to there are a lot of legacy wiki data,
which use "%2F" in file names.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/232239004-3359d7b9-7bf3-4ff3-8446-bfb0e79645dd.png)
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2114189/232239020-74b92c72-bf73-4377-a319-1c85609f82b1.png)
Co-authored-by: Giteabot <teabot@gitea.io>
Remove the misbehaving function and call
Repository.GetFilesChangedBetween instead.
Fixes #23919
---
~~_TODO_ test this~~ `Repository.getFilesChanged` seems to be only used
by Gitea Actions, but a similar function already exists
**Update** I tested this change and the issue is gone.
Reference:
https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/issues/22578#issuecomment-1444180053
Credits to @tdesveaux , thank you very much for catching the problem. If
you'd like to open a PR, feel free to replace this one.
Git reports fatal errors for ambiguous arguments:
```
fatal: ambiguous argument 'refs/a...refs/b': unknown revision or path not in the working tree.
Use '--' to separate paths from revisions, like this:
'git <command> [<revision>...] -- [<file>...]'
```
So the `--` separator is necessary in some cases.
Currently gitea shows no commit information for files starting with a
colon.
[I set up a minimal repro repository that reproduces this error once
it's migrated on gitea](https://github.com/kbolashev/colon-test)
<img width="1209" alt="image"
src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/111061261/219326625-0e6d3a86-8b58-4d67-bc24-8a78963f36b9.png">
This is happening because the filenames piped to the `git log` command
are written as is, and it doesn't work when you have a colon at the
start of the filename, and you need to escape it.
You can test it locally, if you do
```
mkdir repo
git init
touch :file
git add . && git commit -m "Add file with colon"
git log -- :file
```
git log returns nothing. However, if you do `git log -- "\:file"`, it
will show the commit with the file change.
This PR escapes the starting colons in paths in the `LogNameStatusRepo`
function, making gitea return commit info about the file with the bad
filename.
<img width="1209" alt="image"
src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/111061261/219328299-46451246-4006-45e3-89b1-c244635ded23.png">
This error shows up only with files starting with colon, anywhere else
in filename is ok. Dashes at the beginning also seem to be working.
I don't know gitea internals well enough to know where else this error
can pop up, so I'm keeping this PR small as suggested by your
contributor guide